(Character A) and (Character B) are lovers, but (Character A)’s family thinks they aren’t together. When they go on a trip with their family, they have to pretend to be friends.
(Character A) is a witch, and (Character B) promised their firstborn to them. (Character A) was joking, but (Character B), who didn’t really want kids anyways, took it completely seriously. They soon became actual friends, but then (Character B) accidentally has a kid.
Now, they have to deal with the child, and the custody issues, as (Character B) decided that they now want to be in their kid’s life.
An updated version - might go through more changes. :)
It wasn’t about him. It was never about him.
In fact, she never meant for him to have any involvment in the matter, never meant for him to ever know about it. He was never meant to know anything.
It had started long before she ever knew him.
It started when her father had brought out a lighter one evening. He opened his pack of cigarettes and took a long drag, his shoulders relaxing. He sunk into the chair. He no longer cared about hiding his addiction from his daughter, playing with a doll idly on the carpeted floor, six years old and quiet as a mouse.
She was known for being a rather emotionless child. Not once had she laughed or grinned or cried. Her mother fretted about her, but her father didn’t mind. No tantrums was fine with him. The lack of feelings wasn’t a problem with him. She watched with glazed eyes as flaky ashes fell to the carpet. She stared at them as they floated gently to the floor, choking and coughing a bit from the fumes.
She stared even longer at the lighter. How could a fire be hiding in the tiny object?
Late into the night, she snuck into the living room where the lighter was still lying next to the ashtray, and stole it. The next morning, she hid it in her backpack and ran off into the woods to play.
It was yellow and shiny and had a grey top that flipped open. She immediately was fascinated, entranced. Her eyes lit up for the first time. It was so small, but had such power! When she mimicked her father’s motions, it let out a fizzling spark once, twice, thrice, and then burst into a tiny flame.
She knew what she was doing tomorrow. Her eyes burned with the fire she now possessed.
Her mother found the neighbor’s cat later that month, half-decomposed and covered in soot, and she had screamed. It was the kind of scream from a horror movie that got half-hearted reviews, one that never really sent shivers down your spine. It never even got under her skin. She didn’t care that she had been found out. The cat was annoying anyways. Her flames were bright, unstoppable, unable to be extinguished, and she would feed the fire until everything came down around her.
Years later, in her twenties, she met him. Her lover. He was sunny and bright and passionate and emotional and everything she wasn’t. He was her fire. She wanted him, in a way that she hadn’t wanted since she’d laid her eyes on that lighter over a decade ago.
And eventually, she got him. It seemed like she had attached herself to him, in a strange way. She wanted him to be hers, and only hers, but shied away from affection and emotion. She didn’t know how to respond to his hugs, how to smile for him. She didn’t know how to be genuine.
And that meant that she had to avoid him, and that meant that she left the house often, coat over her shoulders and lighter in her pocket.
She didn’t know what she wanted more, him or her fire. And that scared her.
She hadn’t known what it was like to be scared before.
She flicked the lighter, and threw it down on the large pile of dry grass and twigs at her feet. The willow tree sheltered the newborn flame, and it slowly climbed higher and higher. As it began to lick the tree top, she backed away to admire the light in the drizzling rain. Her light.
Her eyes gleamed.
Her fire burned.
Her lover still smiled for her when she came home. He smiled through watery eyes, and she wasn’t sure if it was from her late return or from the water drops tapping out a rhythm on the sidewalk or from the ash that clung to her shoulders, even through the rain. She didn’t know how to understand what he felt on their best days together.
He hugged her close and securely whenever she came home, and she responded the same. Her eyes were as dry as the Sahara, saved from the rain by her umbrella, glazed over with disinterest. Waiting for the next opportunity to buy another lighter. To buy more gasoline. To build a stack of sticks and grass. To relish in the newfound brightness.
To burn.
(She never thought about how he had had an umbrella of his own when she came out to greet him, and how his clothes were dry.)
She would set the world on fire just to watch it go ablaze, and she would smile the same smile she always had before. An answering smile. An answer to the questions, to the counselors at school and the dead cat her mother found covered in charcoal and gasoline, to the classmates who were afraid of her in kindergarten, to the prescriptions in her cabinet, ever fluorescent.
To her lover, whose eyes were still full of water on the sunniest day of the year. She still ignored the drip-dropping of water on her neck whenever they hugged.
(It wasn’t raining.)
(She didn’t know how to explain it, so she avoided it.)
(Sometimes, she thinks that he cries because he doesn’t know what to do anymore.)
He cried when she left and cried when she came home, and he cried when he was alone and cried when she was with him. He cried when she smelled like a campfire and when she had ashes sprinkled in her hair, and he cried when their budgeting started to include lighters and gasoline.
He cried every tear that she never could.
Sometimes she wished that she could cry for him instead. He must have been so dehydrated.
(For his birthday, she bought him a nice water bottle. “So you can stay hydrated. You cry an awful lot,” she said. He grinned and hugged her, then pulled away quickly.
“Thank you.” His lips were wobbly and saltwater streamed down his cheeks. She smelled like a campfire.)
She always had grey peppering her clothes. Her smile was subdued, but her eyes were distant and wild. Like they knew something. Like they had already watched the world burn down in their head a million times, and enjoyed every second.
A psychopath.
An arsonist.
Someone who burned trees and papers for fun. Someone who bought too many lighters in too little time. (The gas station attendant had never seen so many lighters be laid out on the checkout counter.) Someone who watched her lover cry and looked away with disinterest. Someone who didn’t leave the house one day to burn.
(He was still home, crying in the corner. She didn’t notice him until the end.)
Someone who never cried when she watched her lover scream and his tears evaporate, ugly crying, with eyes of crimson and half moon bruises underneath and snot running down his face, saltwater on his tongue and dripping off his chin just to go up and evaporate in flames and smoke.
Someone who died with her lover by accident and didn’t care. Someone who watched the flames with gleaming eyes until the end.
(Her eyes were still gleaming when they burned to the ground.)
Tfw you’re trying to watch movies illegally online and get sent to NSFW sites
The world is run by the intelligent, and the dumb are considered as lesser humans.
(Character A) is one of the most elite, knowledgeable people, and holds a high ranking. Contrastingly, (Character B) isn’t smart, and is looked at as scum.
However, both of them find each other through the internet, and as they talk more and more, they realize that the system may be rigged.
it’s freezing in the quiet empty.
cold is comforting in its honesty;
the heat may envelope me but it only burns my skin,
its lies are all-encompassing.
yet the cold is here now,
and it is blunt, but it never hugs - it loves without a single touch.
the heat tries to love,
but it sears and scratches my bones, marking and tearing at my skin.
it smears its ash over my broken body, tears turning to steam and my gasping sobs turning into a cacophony of silence.
‘would you rather die of heat or cold?’
someone once said to me that the world will either end in fire or ice.
i know what i would prefer.
i know what i would rather feel.
numbness, hot, blazing frostbite causing slow inane hallucinations, a sick parody of the little match girl.
scathing, writhing flames licking the walls and leaning in, reeking of its victims and leering at its future prey.
i know myself well.
i hate that sometimes.
did you know that cold is not a feasible term?
cold is not its own self.
cold is simply the absence of heat.
a room filled to the brim with snow is not full,
not in the way a room full of fire is.
a room full of fire is suffocation in its most simple form,
smoke rising and smothering.
the snow is breathable, almost nonexistent,
and some animals even hide in the snow for protection in the winter.
did you know that?
the heat is a hitch in your breath, it’s a splatter of ink from a shaking hand.
it is stifling and deadly, not an embrace but a chokehold.
the heat will kill fierce, passionate, ares in his most pure form.
the cold is a ghost of a touch, a never ending inhale, a whisp of an idea.
it is a weathered blanket, holed and tattered and a false shelter in the storm.
the cold will kill gentle, quiet.
there is no glory, no fight in dying of cold.
resignation is cold, so it makes sense that cold will kill with resignation.
too little or too much?
i have always been safe in my choices.
too much will never make me empty,
too much will never leave me in the dark, blind and unknowing,
too much will never let me stay alone in blue air and white breaths and blurry vision from the saltwater streaming down my crimson cheeks and lips like shattered glass,
too much will never crack me with nothing, a void in my eyes and a thousand yard stare,
too much will never keep me deathly still in anticipation until everything seeps out of me in a realization that I only anticipate anticipation.
but even so…
too little will never send a fire through my nerves and cauterize my heart,
too little will never shatter me in a haze of red and dusty charcoal,
too little will never trace delicate fingers of ember across me and scar me in the ashes,
too little will never kill me with a glance, break me with uncertainty.
drowning is inevitable either way.
i will drown in either the oasis or the ocean,
nothing or all.
too little will never satisfy me,
but too much will only hurt me.
adventure has never been my friend,
and courage is swapped for anxiety.
my mind is not my brain,
and its thoughts aren’t my choices,
so i take the safe road,
as i always do.
…..
….
…
..
.
..
…
….
…..
the oasis is an empty salvation.
the ocean is an empty home.
water is simply an empty.
in the end, i will die, and it will be silent.
it is on nights like these that i think i will live in the nothing until nothing is my everything.
until i know the nothing as my home.
...
i will never know fulfillment the way i know the empty.
(Character A) is a writer lacking inspiration. (Character B) is recently gained the place in the Guinness Book Of Word Records as the most interesting person in the world. They just bumped into each other, literally, in a coffee shop.
(Character A)’s life is set up completely by their parents for a social experiment; complete with castings for background characters and side characters.
(Character B) is a side character in (Character A)’s life. They’re supposed to be the bully, but as they find themselves falling for (Character A), they start to break their script.
It goes like this.
A snake meets an angel in a garden of peace and figures that knowledge was more important than that peace. The angel believes they were not destined to be. He gives a sword to the first two humans, and does not fall.
The snake is decidedly not jealous.
He will never be jealous of not falling, because it was what he was always meant to do anyways, wasn’t he?
He was always meant to go down in a blaze of searing flesh and bone and fire, fire, flames that burnt him and swirled around him as he screamed and screamed but it wouldn’t stop, it would never ever stop because all his tears were evaporating and it’s like they never existed and it’s been so long now, is this his new forever? Is this what he is meant to be? Merely an angel for an instant, a plaything to be thrown away for simply asking the wrong questions at the wrong time?
Is this his fault?
(If all the tears he cried wouldn’t have gone up in smoke, maybe they would have been the water to fill the ocean).
It’s fine.
It’s what he was made for, to be tested. The angel wasn’t.
He was fine.
Anyways, he may have gone and fallen in love with said angel.
He was just so wonderful and sweet and genuine, and he was everything the demonic snake would never be. In fact, the demon hadn’t even known that he could love anything until now.
He wasn’t supposed to love anything at all, but here he was, stupidly pining for someone who could never love him.
Hopeless.
—
It goes like this.
Holy water is passed from an angel to a demon, no longer in the form of a snake, and it doesn’t burn the demon. It doesn’t even touch his skin. Not for a second did he even think it would.
They have changed a whole lot since they met, but they have sown trust, and they have sown a bond. A new bond.
Never before has there been a pair of genuine friends that consisted of a demon and an angel, never before has there been a pair that has come close to even fraternization. Not even after the six thousand years they had known each other.
And yet...
He is still going too fast for the angel.
And he doesn’t know how.
“Too fast?!” He throws a plate to the floor, and it shatters. The shards scatter all around the room, and it almost desperately trying to get away from him, hiding under the sofa and under the space between the counters and the floor. His plants are shaking like they never have before, terrified of his unheavenly wrath.
“It’s been so long,” and he sharply pulls on his hair and now he’s crying and tear tracks are running down his face. He doesn’t care. “I’ve waited so long. I’ve tried my best. I’ve-“
He chokes on nothing but his own despair.
He’s kneeling in the shards and they’re digging into his knees. He couldn’t care less.
“What do I need to do?” He was asking someone, anyone, whoever could give him any semblance of an answer, but nobody did. He didn’t know if anyone could.
“How do I be enough? How long do I have to wait until I’m worth more to somebody?” The unknowing of what comes next cut his heart out with a butcher knife made of his own desperation. The only sound to answer his pleas, his prayers, was his own shaky breathing and his plants shuddering.
“Can he even love me?”
And that was the question, wasn’t it? He clenched his eyes shut and put his hands over his ears, alone but surrounded by so much noise, a ringing in his ears that wouldn’t go away. He could hear his decorative heart beating, pounding away, like a symbol crashing with crescendo of a whole orchestra his ears.
He was making up noises at this point, wasn’t he? Trying to deafen the silence with his own imagination. As if it could take away everything that there wasn’t. His plants had stopped cowering. They knew the only thing he wanted to yell at right now was himself.
How had God made him this way? Why did he have to exist like this, confused and incapable of accepting the simple fact that he was unlovable? How had he been cursed with a heart that cared about everything?
How had he been cursed to love when he couldn’t be loved himself?
And as he was breaking down for the thousandth time exactly in his lifetime, the angel was fixing himself a cup of tea and humming a simple melody, settling down to read one of his more recently acquired books, completely and utterly unaware of any of it. And he was still alone.
Utterly hopeless.
—
It goes like this.
The Armageddon’t was averted, and the angel and demon have saved the world. Neither of them were expected to, and neither of them were supposed to, but they did. They exist just the same as they did before.
They still drink too much together and dine at the Ritz and talk about dolphins and whales and ducks and live quite normally.
(Well, as normal as you can expect it to get.)
The demon still has yellow snake eyes and listens to Queen almost obsessively and drives too fast, and the angel still loves fancy restaurants and reads old books and barely sells any of them to his customers.
And the demon still loves.
And he still hates that he does.
“I hate caring,” he says one evening, half-way into his third bottle of fine wine. There’s no way he’s sober at this point. He had been drinking since he had arrived at Aziraphale’s bookshop, despite Aziraphale himself declining to partake in it. “I just hate it so much.”
“I know, dear,” Aziraphale raises an eyebrow and turns a page of the book he’s reading. Crowley’s pretty sure it’s one of Jane Austen’s earlier novels. “You’ve told me many times.”
“I know, I know, I know,” Crowley waves him off, but just a bit too enthusiastically, and leans forward on his knees. “But I just hate it. Too much.”
“Too much what?” He asks. He turns the page, but is almost certainly not reading it. He seems more focused on the conversation now.
“There’s too much. I feel too much. Not s’posed to.” Crowley pulls a disgusted look. “Demons ‘r not s’posed to love ‘n stuff.”
Aziraphale frowns and it looks almost like he’s trying to figure out a puzzle in his head. “You can love?”
Crowley chokes like he did so long ago, and there’s something trapped in the back of his throat, a lump that’s suffocating him, and he almost hopes that he could really die instead of just discorporate.
“I-“ he swallows deep, “I wish I couldn’t. God- Satan- Somebody,” he doesn’t know who somebody even is.
“I wish I couldn’t, so bad. So bad.” He wishes he weren’t so drunk, too, but he doesn’t want to sober up, and the love thing precedes the drunkenness by a large portion.
“Why would you not want to be able to love?” Aziraphale questions, a concerned look in his eyes. “Why would you ever want that? That would be horrible!”
“No it wouldn’t.” Crowley is completely serious, and it’s clear that Aziraphale doesn’t understand at all.
“How could not loving ever be a good thing?!”
“How could it ever be a good thing?”
Aziraphale pinches his nose and sighs. “I’m really arguing with a drunk Crowley right now,” he mutters under his breath. “Sober up.”
“But-“ Crowley whines, and Aziraphale shushes him with a finger. He huffs. “‘Kay...”
He sobers up in less than a minute, and opens his eyes to see Aziraphale with his arms crossed in front of him.
“Explain your argument.” He asks politely, and Crowley is so ready to destroy him with his debate skills.
“I love a lot, unfortunately, and people can’t love me.” He lays it plainly out in front of them, and can’t understand for the life of him why Aziraphale looks so pained.
“... Are you okay?” asks Crowley, and is completely surprised and overtaken by Aziraphale squeezing the living daylights out of him. He makes a noise that is not a squeak (it totally is, but he will never admit it) as his rib cage is practically ground to dust.
“What-“ he lets out a breath as Aziraphale hugs him closer. “What’s this for and also I can’t breathe please let me go what are you doing-“
“I’m hugging you,” says Aziraphale simply, and only lets Crowley have a bit of breathing room.
“But why?” Crowley asks with a furrowed brow.
“Because you need one, clearly,” and that’s the explanation he gives.
Crowley is still not following. “Why would I need a hug?”
“You can be loved,” and Crowley’s lungs are screaming for another reason as all his air is stolen, along with his words.
“You can be loved so much, Crowley, you can be loved, you can be loved, I love you and you don’t even know how much, I promise you I’ll never hide it ever again, I promise, you go so fast but I think I’ve caught up, Crowley, oh dear...” There’s tears dripping and soaking his shirt, but he doesn’t care, because he’s ruining Aziraphale’s coat too.
“I-“ How does one say that they have loved another for thousands of years? Since the garden of Eden? Since they knew each other?
“I love you so much I can’t think anymore,” is what he goes with. “I just never thought that anyone could love a demon.”
The angel, his angel, was still holding him in his arms. “I’m not sure if being a demon suits you, darling. I think you may be the only exception.”
And so they live as exceptions.
Mutual exceptions, a demon who didn’t quite suit being a demon or an angel, and an angel who didn’t quite suit being an angel or a demon.
In the end, they were quite human.
And they were quite happy with that.
Maybe they weren’t quite hopeless.
john watson background!!!!!
(picture not owned by me, btw)
(Character A) is in a relationship with (Character B). However, they became a couple after coming home from (Character A)’s family’s trip and pretending to be together. Their family found out that they were pretending on the last day of the trip, and think they are still friends. One member of the family, one that they both hate, said that they would be good together. Neither of them want to prove the family member right.
Recently, they were invited to another family trip. Now, (Character A) and (Character B) have to pretend to still be friends, the opposite of what they did before.
Mostly writing prompts, but will also post little drabbles and occasionally fanfic. If you use one of my prompts, please let me know! I would love to read it.Open to submissions, questions, and possibly writing for others. You can ask me anything, and I’ll answer or consider it!Really into TØP and P!ATD. Will switch fandoms a lot, but currently into Dear Evan Hansen, the Phandom, and Good Omens. Feminist. Bisexual and proud 😊No set schedule for my posts.By the way, check out my side-blog, rhythm-on-the-offbeat, which has some memes and more random thoughts of mine! :)
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